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Volumn 150, Issue 3, 2004, Pages 187-190
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Extremity injuries remain a high surgical workload in a conflict zone: experiences of a British Field Hospital in Iraq, 2003.
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Author keywords
[No Author keywords available]
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Indexed keywords
ABDOMINAL INJURY;
AMPUTATION;
ARM INJURY;
ARTICLE;
BLAST INJURY;
EMERGENCY HEALTH SERVICE;
ETHNOLOGY;
HOSPITAL;
HUMAN;
IRAQ;
LAPAROTOMY;
LEG INJURY;
ORTHOPEDICS;
PUBLIC HOSPITAL;
RETROSPECTIVE STUDY;
STATISTICS;
SURGERY;
THORAX INJURY;
UNITED KINGDOM;
UTILIZATION REVIEW;
WAR;
WORKLOAD;
ABDOMINAL INJURIES;
AMPUTATION;
ARM INJURIES;
BLAST INJURIES;
GREAT BRITAIN;
HOSPITALS, MILITARY;
HOSPITALS, PACKAGED;
HUMANS;
IRAQ;
LAPAROTOMY;
LEG INJURIES;
ORTHOPEDICS;
RETROSPECTIVE STUDIES;
SURGICAL PROCEDURES, OPERATIVE;
THORACIC INJURIES;
TRIAGE;
WAR;
WORKLOAD;
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EID: 16644369886
PISSN: 00358665
EISSN: None
Source Type: Journal
DOI: 10.1136/jramc-150-03-06 Document Type: Article |
Times cited : (25)
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References (0)
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